Academic literature on the topic 'Investments – Yugoslavia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Investments – Yugoslavia"

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Simic Saric, Marija. "Does a Venture Capital Market Exist in the Countries of Former Yugoslavia?" KnE Social Sciences 1, no. 2 (March 19, 2017): 197. http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/kss.v1i2.657.

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<p>Venture capital investments spread all over the world during the last few decades. Until then, they were considered only as an American phenomenon. Countries worldwide are interested in attracting venture capital investments because of their undisputable effects on the economy. The effects of the investments are visible through the impact on innovation, creation of new companies, jobs, economic growth, corporate governance and etc.</p><p>Venture capital is a subset of Private equity focused on start-up companies and companies having difficulties in attracting necessary capital. It represents an equity investment made for the launch, early development, or expansion of a business.</p><p>The countries of former Yugoslavia (Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia - FYROM, Montenegro, Slovenia and Serbia) are part of the Central and Eastern Europe countries and represent relatively a new market for venture capitalists. They moved from the planned economies to a free market system in the 90s of 20 century. As well as other countries in the World, these countries are also interested in attracting venture capital because of the proven impact on economic growth. Despite the presence of Venture capital and Private equity funds in this region for more than twenty years, the venture capital and private equity market in the countries of former Yugoslavia is underdeveloped compared to other countries of CEE. Indeed, the venture capital investments are so small for some countries of former Yugoslavia that the data about venture capital investment are published jointly.</p><p> </p><p>The objective of this paper is to examine and analyze the development of Venture Capital market in countries o former Yugoslavia. The research is both qualitative and quantitative, and involves an identification, analysis and comparison of PE/VC investments data for selected countries. The time frame for this research is between 2007 and 2014. The total volume of venture capital investments per year, the number of companies invested and the ratio of PE investments to the gross domestic product (GDP) will be used to demonstrate the existence of the venture capital market in countries of former Yugoslavia. The data necessary for the current research were taken from the yearbook of EVCA/PEREP Analytics for 2014 for Baltics and Ex-Y. „PEREP Analytics” is a centralized, non-commercial pan-European private equity database. The „PEREP Analytics” statistics platform monitors the development of private equity and venture capital in 25 European countries.</p>
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Nagler, David D. "Yugoslavia: Law on Foreign Investments." International Legal Materials 28, no. 6 (November 1989): 1543–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020782900017277.

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Vuletic, Dean. "Generation Number One: Politics and Popular Music in Yugoslavia in the 1950s." Nationalities Papers 36, no. 5 (November 2008): 861–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905990802373579.

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Popular music is one of the cultural phenomena that has been most shared among the peoples inhabiting the territory of the former Yugoslavia; indeed, considering the persistence of a common popular music culture there even after the break up of the Yugoslav federation in 1991, there is perhaps little in cultural life that unites them more. It was in the 1950s that a Yugoslav popular music culture emerged through the development of local festivals, radio programs and a recording industry, at a time when popular music was also referred to as “dance,” “entertainment” or “light” music, and when jazz, pop and, by the end of the decade, rock and roll were the styles of it that were being listened to in Yugoslavia and around the world. However, the development of a Yugoslav popular music culture at this time was rooted not only in international cultural trends but was also shaped by the domestic and foreign policies that were pursued by the ruling Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY), which was renamed the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (LCY) in 1952. Through its cultural, economic and foreign policies, the party sought to define Yugoslavia's position in Cold War international relations, develop a sense of Yugoslav identity among its multinational citizenry, and reconstruct and modernize a country that had suffered some of the greatest losses in Europe in the Second World War—and which had, just before it, been one of the Continent's least developed states, not only economically but also in terms of cultural infrastructure. In the cultural sphere, investments were needed immediately after the war to redress the facts that Yugoslavia had high rates of illiteracy and low rates of radio ownership by European standards, that cultural activities beyond folklore remained the purview of a small urban elite, and that it lacked musical artists, schools and instruments—with great disparities in all of these measures existing between its more developed northern areas (Slovenia, Croatia and northern Serbia) and the poorer south (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro and southern Serbia). For example, with regards to radio ownership, in 1946 the number of individuals per radio ranged from 40 in Slovenia, 48 in Croatia and 91 in Serbia to 137 in Macedonia, 288 in Bosnia-Herzegovina and 702 in Montenegro, with the average for all of Yugoslavia being 78.
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Lazarevic, Zarko. "Foreign Investments and Socialist Enterprise in Slovenia (Yugoslavia): The Case of the Kolektor Company." Hungarian Historical Review 10, no. 3 (2021): 556–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.38145/2021.3.556.

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In this article, I examine foreign investment in the socialist enterprise in the former Yugoslavia based on the case study of Kolektor in the context of the liberalized communist social and economic order. Foreign investments were allowed in the form of joint ventures. I present these investments from the viewpoint of economic reforms, the concept of socialist enterprise, and the concept of economic development, which enabled foreign investments and shaped regulation and the structure of foreign investments in Yugoslavia. The history of the case of Kolektor began at a time when Slovenia still belonged to the former Yugoslavia, which was arguably a liberalized type of communist economic system. This was during the Cold War, when both Europe and the rest of the world were divided essentially along the lines of the communist east and the capitalist west. The Kolektor Company was established in 1963 as a state socialist enterprise for the manufacture of the rotary electrical switches known as commutators. From the outset, the company tried to establish international cooperation to acquire modern technology. In 1968, it reached an agreement with the West German Company Kautt & Bux, which at the time was the technological and market leader in the production of commutators. Kautt & Bux invested in Kolektor and became an owner of 49 percent of the company. The investment proved very profitable for both partners. The Slovenian side got access to modern technology and expertise, and the German side got additional production facilities, skilled workers, and low-cost production, which increased its competitiveness on international markets.
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Stamova, Mariyana. "The Albanians in Yugoslavia from the late 1960s to the early 1980s." Historijski pogledi 4, no. 5 (May 31, 2021): 130–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.52259/historijskipogledi.2021.4.5.130.

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The paper focuses on the events after the Brioni plenum of the Central Committee of the LCY in 1966. The turning point for the development of the national relationships in the Yugoslav federation became namely the Brioni plenim. This plenum and its decisions led to a liberalization of the national relationships in Yugoslavia, thus to the outburst of the Albanian problem, which was severely suppressed to this moment. This is the first major victory for the Albanians in Yugoslavia. In this regard, a movement has begun among the Albanian population in the multinational federation with the main goal of achieving full national recognition, including republican status for Kosovo. This new policy towards the minorities in Yugoslavia was introduced after the middle of the 1960s. Its expression became the new constitutional definition of “Yugoslav peoples and ethnoses”, which had to substitute the term “national minorities”. That led to changes into the rights of Albanians in Yugoslavia, and as a result their socio-political activity drastically aroused. The Yugoslav party leadership started again to look for a solution of the Albanian issue. Significant Yugoslav financial aid and investments were directed towards Kosovo, aiming at a closer incorporation of the Albanians in the Yugoslav federation and an interruption of their connection with Albania. After the Brioni Plenum, the Albanian problem in the Yugoslav Federation entered a qualitatively new state. The events in the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and the neighboring Republic of Macedonia at the end of 1968 played an important role in the further development of this problem and in the changes in the constitutional, legal and socio-political development of the Yugoslav Federation. So after the demonstrations of the Albanian population in Kosovo and Macedonia at the end of 1968, a “creeping Albanization” started in Kosovo. The Albanian political elite and intelligencia played the most important role in the imposition of the “Albanization” as a political line at the end of the 1960s. Albanians hold all important posts in administration, culture, education and political life of Kosovo. That led to an increasing mistrust between the Albanian population and the Serbian-Montenegrin minority, and the last was forced to leave its homes and to migrate in other republics and regions. The political leadership in Prishtina insisted the autonomous region to get equal rights with the republics as a federal unit. That is how at the beginning of the 1970s Kosovo issue transferred into a problem of the whole Yugoslav federation, not only a Serbian one. The Albanians in Prishtina were involved into the confrontation Zagreb-Belgrade and acquired a support from the Croatian side, as well as the Slovenian one in the efforts to take their problem out of Serbia and to put it on a federal level at the League Communists of Yugoslavia (LCY) and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). The processes in the political life of the autonomous region Kosovo were not isolated and were connected with the events in the Yugoslav federation as a whole, and precisely in Croatia at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 70s, which culmination was so-called “Zagreb Spring” in 1971. The Croatian crisis had an important influence on the national relationships in the federation and led to an inflammation of the national disputes. That had a direct impact on the political life of Kosovo. Searching for allies against Serbian hegemony and unitarism, which were the main danger for the Croatian republic, Zagreb’s political leadership supported Kosovo pretensions for the extension of the autonomous rights and the freedoms of the Albanians. The amendments to the federal system of Yugoslavia (1968-1971) and the new Yugoslav constitution from 1974 are reflected in Kosovo, which makes the Albanian problem not only a problem of Serbia, but also a common Yugoslav problem.
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Savic, Ljubodrag. "Foreign direct investments-expected inflow: Reality or great illusion." Privredna izgradnja 45, no. 3-4 (2002): 233–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/priz0203233s.

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For more than ten years the Yugoslav economy and its industry are undergoing a very serious economic crisis, leading not only to a drastic deterioration of all economic performances, but above all to a dramatic exclusion form the world economic flows, being characteristic for the process of globalization and initiated by the world most powerful countries. In the pre-globalization period the firm's expansion was performed through an increased export. In the last three decades a considerable change took place, when instead of their export expansion large companies increasingly began to base strategies of access on foreign markets on direct international investments, new forms of international trade and international agreements and cooperation. The essential problem (possibly even the preliminary one), i.e. a necessary condition for the Yugoslav industry's further development is to find out an appropriate for inclusion into the process of globalization. At this moment his paper's ambitions are a bit more modest. The basic idea is to discuss the distribution of direct foreign investments from the geographic aspect with a somewhat more detailed analysis of the direct foreign investments inflow in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, and to look for an answer to the question what are the chances of Yugoslavia to attract a larger amount of direct foreign investments, since their lack would lead to an intensification of the economic crisis, i.e. impossibility of any serious economic development, thus leaving our country to lag behind at the far civilization periphery of the world.
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Njegomir, Vladimir, and Dragan Stojič. "Determinants of Insurance Market Attractiveness for Foreing Investments: The Case of Ex-Yugoslavia." Economic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja 23, no. 3 (January 2010): 96–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1331677x.2010.11517426.

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Užičanin, Salkan. "PITANJE STRANE RADNE SNAGE U INDUSTRIJI BOSNE I HERCEGOVINE (1918–1941)." Historijska misao 6, no. 6 (December 1, 2021): 97–150. http://dx.doi.org/10.51558/2303-8543.2021.6.6.97.

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Based on available sources and literature, the paper analyzes the issue of foreign labor in the industry of Bosnia and Herzegovina between the two world wars. The appearance of foreign workers are tied tothe Austro-Hungarian period (1878-1918), when a large industrial sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina was erected with the help of foreign investments. The issue of foreign labor was updated after the end of The First World War and the entry of Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of the newly formed Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The new state administration immediately approached the persecution of foreign labor and the legal restriction on its arrival, regardless of the consequences for the industry. It quickly turned out that the advance measures were wrong and had negative effects, as foreigners occupied jobs in an industry that required proper professional qualifications, and which domestic workers could not fill due to lack of education. During the interwar period, the labor market permanently and noticeably lacked a qualified workforce, and the number of unemployed unqualified workers in all branches of industry and crafts grew steadily. Some liberalization for the arrival of a foreign workforce that the state later facilitated was of little use to employers, due to the procedures and costs associated with them, and the slow pace and corruption in the state administration. Keywords: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, foreign workers, qualified workers, emigration.
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Tot, Dora. "Migration for Cooperation." History in flux 3, no. 3 (December 22, 2021): 159–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.32728/flux.2021.3.7.

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Recent studies on labor migration from socialist Yugoslavia have almost exclusively focused on East–West movements and their economic aspects. This paper aims to fill some of this gap in the literature by examining the migration of highly skilled Yugoslav labor to a country in the Global South, namely Algeria. As opposed to previous work that has focused on Yugoslav workers accompanying engineering investment projects in the Global South, this paper examines those who were directly employed by the receiving country. The case of Algeria as a host country deserves attention because Algeria was one of Yugoslavia’s primary partners with whom it cultivated a close political relationship. Drawing on records from the Croatian State Archives, the article will examine Yugoslav technical cooperation experts who were employed by the Algerian government between the early 1960s and the end of the 1980s. The paper will argue that, in pursuit of its political and economic interests in the Global South, the Yugoslav state encouraged and promoted the mobility of highly skilled experts in Algeria to foster cooperation.
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Ptáček, Pavel. "The role of foreign direct investments (FDI) in establishing knowledge economy in the Czech Republic: the case of knowledge-intensive business services." Studies of the Industrial Geography Commission of the Polish Geographical Society 14 (January 1, 2009): 22–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.24917/20801653.14.3.

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For the location of new activities in CEE, a helpful factor was sobering up of the European companies from the Indian euphoria. Because of different, lower-level property rights, difficulties in intercultural communication and, very often, only superficial knowledge of the topic, the companies stopped outsourcing of some more sensitive activities to India or China.From the global point of view the “CEE miracle” is hard to compare with Asia, if in 2006 the CEE region received only a little more than $2B, in comparison to $386.5B worldwide (Třešňák 2007). But it brings new high-quality working places and highly embedded investments; additionally the multiplying effect is also much higher than in mounting factories activities. Outsourcing also supports motivation for education, world languages knowledge, travelling, and other positive phenomena. There are no or only very few risks. Who can be the competitor in the region? Economists do not suppose that the investment boom will stop in the near future. But Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, and maybe countries of former Yugoslavia are perceived as direct future competitors of the Vysehrad region. Despite the fact that we can observe a geographical trend towards selective concentration of these quaternary activities to big centres, especially metropolitan regions, and increasing polarisation between regions, positive effects for the country as a whole prevail. An important role of FDI localisation is played by the presence of technical universities and other „soft“ infrastructure. They do not bring the highest number of created jobs, but they are crucial in embedding other economic activities.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Investments – Yugoslavia"

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Duljković, Zenon. "Investiční a daňové prostředí vybraných zemí bývalé Jugoslávie." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2012. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-199956.

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The Master's thesis "Investment and tax environment of selected former Yugoslavian countries" deals with current tax systems and investment environment of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia. The first three chapters of the thesis are focused on the economic situation of selected countries, their business relations among themselves and the EU countries, foreign direct investment and rating. The fourth key chapter starts with the tax theory and fiscal harmonization within the European Union in order to give detailed analysis of tax systems with emphasis on current development. In conclusion is elaborated the comparison of selected tax systems.
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UVALIC, Milica. "Investment in labour managed firms : theoretical problems and empirical evidence from Yugoslavia." Doctoral thesis, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5091.

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Defence date: 12 December 1988
Examining Board: Prof. Mario Nuti (E.U.I., Supervisor) ; Prof. Wlodzimierz Brus, Wolfson College, Oxford ; Prof. Benedetto Gui, University of Trieste ; Prof. Marie Lavigne, University of Paris I ; Prof. Ales Vahcic, ICPE. Llubjana and University of Llubjana
First made available online 8 July 2015
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Books on the topic "Investments – Yugoslavia"

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Bauwens, Jan G. Industrial co-operation and investment in Yugoslavia. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 1986.

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Bauwens, Jan G. Industrial co-operation and investment in Yugoslavia. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 1986.

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Dragan, Milošević. Foreign investments in Yugoslavia: Regulations, practices, and opportunities : guidebook. Belgrade: IRO Privredapublik, 1989.

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Direct foreign investment in Yugoslavia: A microeconomic model. New York: Praeger, 1986.

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Investing in Yugoslavia and other forms of long-term economic cooperation with Yugoslav enterprises: Guidebook. 2nd ed. Belgrade: Exportpress, 1986.

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Investment and property rights in Yugoslavia: The long transition to a market economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.

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Yugoslavia. Investing in Yugoslavia: Challenges and opportunities : the Foreign Investment Law, the Enterprises Law. Beograd: Jugoslovenski pregled, 1989.

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US GOVERNMENT. Consular convention with the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia: Message from the President of the United States transmitting the consular convention between the United States of America and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia signed at Belgrade June 6, 1988. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1989.

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US GOVERNMENT. Consular convention with the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia: Message from the President of the United States transmitting the consular convention between the United States of America and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia signed at Belgrade June 6, 1988. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1989.

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Deichmann, Joel I., ed. Foreign Direct Investment in the Successor States of Yugoslavia. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55739-3.

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Book chapters on the topic "Investments – Yugoslavia"

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Bendeković, Jadranko, and Ivan Teodorović. "Investment Decision-Making in Yugoslavia." In Macroeconomic Management and the Enterprise in East and West, 255–67. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-08375-6_14.

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Artisien, Patrick, Carl H. McMillan, and Matija Rojec. "Profile of Yugoslav External Investments." In Yugoslav Multinationals Abroad, 38–50. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12128-1_4.

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Artisien, Patrick, Carl H. McMillan, and Matija Rojec. "Yugoslav Investments in the West." In Yugoslav Multinationals Abroad, 56–69. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12128-1_6.

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Artisien, Patrick, Carl H. McMillan, and Matija Rojec. "Yugoslav Investments in the Third World." In Yugoslav Multinationals Abroad, 70–87. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-12128-1_7.

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Artisien, Patrick, Matija Rojec, and Marjan Svetlicic. "Yugoslav Foreign Direct Investment in Less Developed Countries." In Multinational Enterprises in Less Developed Countries, 225–47. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-11699-7_10.

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Deichmann, Joel I. "Overview of Foreign Direct Investment in Former Yugoslavia and Related Scholarly Literature." In Economic Geography, 1–21. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55739-3_1.

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Ćurčić, Nevena, Željko Bjeljac, and Jovana Brankov. "Rural Olympiads as Promoters of Old Folk Sports and Games." In Slovenia has built a system of local self-government within the main provisions of the European Charter on local self-government. According to the local Self-Government Act, municipalities have some competences in individual areas of development, including tourism. However, the existing system could further benefit from enhancing local autonomy – whether in policy scope or fiscal capacity. Municipalities are not stimulated to engage in proactive management of local policies and services, and although the competences of municipalities are regulated (and protected) by the Constitution, the Local Self-Government Acts and special laws, some policy areas are too loosely defined and rely heavily on the agendas of individual local governments. In this contribution, we address the question of how municipalities collect resources to develop tourism, and what are the issues in planning tourism-related investments., 23–50. University of Maribor Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18690/um.ft.6.2022.2.

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Traditional sports and games represent the folk tradition and culture of certain regions, part of the people’s intangible cultural heritage. Numerous traditional sports and games have been preserved in ex-Yugoslav republics, which are most often affirmed through village Olympiads and competitions in order to keep them from being forgotten. The aim of the study is to determine the content and program of rural Olympiads in ex-Yugoslav republics, the extent to which traditional sports and games are present, and the extent to which some modern sports are included. Also, the study focused on the impact of rural Olympiads on local communities and on the interaction between hosts and guests. The methodology used in the paper refers to field research (interview, observation), and document analysis, as well as the use of different data sources to validate and crosscheck findings. The results of the research indicate the presence of a large number of games of different character in the countries formed in Yugoslavia, as well as a large number of the same or similar games that arose more as a result of certain geographical and social conditions, and less as a feature of individual peoples.
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"The determinants of investment in Yugoslavia." In Investment and Property Rights in Yugoslavia, 97–123. Cambridge University Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511559310.008.

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"Yugoslav investment and savings performance." In Investment and Property Rights in Yugoslavia, 69–96. Cambridge University Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511559310.007.

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"Extensions of the LMF investment theory." In Investment and Property Rights in Yugoslavia, 29–53. Cambridge University Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511559310.005.

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Conference papers on the topic "Investments – Yugoslavia"

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Robinson Beachboard, Martine, and John C. Beachboard. "Implications of Foreign Ownership on Journalistic Quality in a Post-Communist Society: The Case of Finance." In InSITE 2006: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3029.

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When freedom from Communism largely eliminated overt government censorship of newspapers, other political and business pressures appeared. Consequently, Southeastern European newspaper publishers faced threats to financial viability and editorial integrity. The editor-in-chief of one newspaper in the former Yugoslavian republic of Slovenia claims to have found freedom from political and advertiser influence after a global media conglomerate invested in the publication. Notably, the business daily Finance is the only hard-news start-up to survive in the eleven years since Slovenia gained independence from the Republic of Yugoslavia. This research paper offers a provocative example where international investment appears to have contributed to the democratizing of media in a post-communist society. The paper is not intended to argue that foreign media investments are necessarily beneficial but to suggest some circumstances in which foreign media investment can be advantageous to the democratic aspirations of a society.
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